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Query: UMLS:C0546837 (esophageal cancer)
8,907 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The object of this article is to assess current staging accuracies for individual modalities and to investigate the influence of the multidisciplinary team (MDT) on clinical staging accuracies and treatment selection for patients with gastro-esophageal cancer. Patients newly diagnosed with gastric or esophageal cancer and who were deemed suitable for surgical resection by the MDT were studied. Patients were staged with a combination of computerized tomography (CT), endoscopic ultrasound (EUS) and laparoscopic ultrasound (LUS). Additionally, the MDT determined an overall clinical stage for each patient after discussion at the MDT meeting. Treatments were selected according to this final clinical stage. Final histopathological staging (pTNM) was available for all patients and was used as the gold standard for determining staging accuracy. Suitability of treatment selection was assessed once final pTNM was available. One hundred and eighteen patients were studied. Endoscopic ultrasound was the most accurate individual staging modality for the loco-regional assessment of esophageal tumors (T stage accuracy 78%, N stage accuracy 70%). Laparoscopic ultrasound was the most accurate modality in T staging of gastric cancers (91%). The MDT stage was more accurate than each individual staging modality for T and N staging for both gastric and esophageal cancers (accuracy range: 88-89%) and was better for the assessment of nodal disease than each individual modality (CT P < 0.001, EUS P < 0.01, LUS P < 0.01). Overall staging accuracy as determined at the MDT meeting was increased and resulted in only 2/118 (2%) patients being under-treated. The MDT significantly improves staging accuracy for gastro-esophageal cancer and ensures that correct management decisions are made for the highest number of individual patients.
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PMID:The multidisciplinary team meeting improves staging accuracy and treatment selection for gastro-esophageal cancer. 1706 82

We examined the proteomic background of esophageal cancer. We used laser microdissection to obtain tumor tissues from 72 esophageal squamous cell carcinoma cases and adjacent normal tissues in 57 of these cases. The 2D-DIGE generated quantitative expression profiles with 1730 protein spots. Based on the intensity of the protein spots, unsupervised classification distinguished the tumor tissues from their normal counterparts, and subdivided the tumor tissues according to their histological differentiation. We identified 498 protein spots with altered intensity in the tumor tissues, which protein identification by LC-MS/MS showed to correspond to 217 gene products. We also found 41 protein spots that were associated with nodal metastasis, and identified 33 proteins corresponding to the spots, including cancer-associated proteins such as alpha-actinin 4, hnRNP K, periplakin, squamous cell carcinoma antigen 1 and NudC. The identified cancer-associated proteins have been previously reported to be individually involved in a range of cancer types, and our study observed them collectively in a single type of malignancy, esophageal cancer. As the identified proteins are involved in important biological processes such as cytoskeletal/structural organization, transportation, chaperon, oxidoreduction, transcription and signal transduction, they may function in a coordinate manner in carcinogenesis and tumor progression of esophageal cancer.
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PMID:Protein clusters associated with carcinogenesis, histological differentiation and nodal metastasis in esophageal cancer. 1713 71

Computed tomography (CT) and endoscopy/endoscopic ultrasonography are usually performed to initially stage patients with esophageal cancer, to determine primary tumor response, and to detect nodal and distant metastases after preoperative therapy. Positron-emission tomography (PET) with [18F]-fluoro-2-deoxy-D-glucose and integrated CT-PET are useful in the initial staging of patients with esophageal cancer as well as in the prediction of pathologic response, disease-free interval, and overall survival after preoperative therapy. Importantly, integrated CT-PET imaging decreases the number of futile attempts at surgical resection, mainly because of the detection of occult distant metastases. The following sections review the use of integrated CT-PET imaging in determining the T, N, and M descriptors of the American Joint Commission on Cancer's 2002 guidelines for pathologic and clinical staging at initial diagnosis and after chemoradiation therapy in those patients being considered for surgical resection.
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PMID:The role of integrated computed tomography positron-emission tomography in esophageal cancer: staging and assessment of therapeutic response. 1718 95

Although locoregional recurrence is often observed in the cervicothoracic area even after an esophagectomy with three-field lymph node dissection (3FL), recurrence in the mediastinal lymph nodes is relatively rare. We experienced two cases of solitary recurrence in a posterior mediastinal node (No 112-ao) after a curative resection for thoracic esophageal cancer. The lymph node recurrence was located in the connective tissue adjacent to the left posterior wall of the thoracic aorta, and thus could not have been removed by the conventional approach of an esophagectomy through a right thoracotomy. These two patients underwent surgical removal of the tumor through left thoracotomy, and survived for 5 years and 1 year without recurrence, respectively. Because the rate of metastasis in this area appears to be low, it is not always necessary to perform complete nodal dissection of the left side of the descending aorta at the initial surgery in cases of thoracic esophageal cancer. However, our experience suggests the importance of periodic computed tomography scans to check for any nodal recurrence in this area, since a surgical resection may be effective when the recurrence is detected as a solitary metastasis.
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PMID:Solitary nodal recurrence in the dorsal area of the thoracic aorta after a curative resection of esophageal cancer: report of two cases. 1734 67

Node-positive esophageal cancer is associated with a dismal prognosis. The impact of a solitary involved node, however, is unclear, and this study examined the implications of a solitary node compared with greater nodal involvement and node-negative disease. The clinical and pathologic details of 604 patients were entered prospectively into a database from1993 and 2005. Four pathologic groups were analyzed: node-negative, one lymph node positive, two or three lymph nodes positive, and greater than three lymph nodes positive. Three hundred and fifteen patients (52%) were node-positive and 289 were node-negative. The median survival was 26 months in the node-negative group. Patients (n=84) who had one node positive had a median survival of 16 months (p=0.03 vs node-negative). Eighty-four patients who had two or three nodes positive had a median survival of 11 months compared with a median survival of 8 months in the 146 patients who had greater than three nodes positive (p=0.01). The survival of patients with one node positive [number of nodes (N)=1] was also significantly greater than the survival of patients with 2-3 nodes positive (N=2-3) (p=0.049) and greater than three nodes positive (p<0001). The presence of a solitary involved lymph node has a negative impact on survival compared with node-negative disease, but it is associated with significantly improved overall survival compared with all other nodal groups.
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PMID:Impact of solitary involved lymph node on outcome in localized cancer of the esophagus and esophagogastric junction. 1743 35

Concurrent chemoradiotherapy administered either before surgery or as definitive treatment has a central role in the multimodality treatment of locally advanced esophageal cancer. Initial studies of this combined-modality regimen were based on models of squamous-cell cancers from other primary sites; this approach progressed from use of bleomycin or fluorouracil plus cisplatin concurrent with radiation in early trials, to the integration of taxanes, camptothecins and platinum analogs in recent trials. These trials demonstrated the tumoricidal effect of concurrent chemotherapy and radiotherapy and showed the survival advantages of this approach. Preoperative concurrent chemoradiation is used to downstage the tumor, ideally to a pathological complete response status in which there is no residual tumor in the resected primary and nodal tissues. A pathological complete response is associated with long-term survival but occurs in a minority (30%) of patients. While clinical trials have demonstrated an improvement in survival with concurrent chemoradiotherapy this effect is limited, as indicated by the plateau in survival beyond 5 years of approximately 30% or less. The recent clinical development of biologic, targeted therapies provides a new avenue for the study of chemoradiotherapy and an opportunity to increase long-term survival.
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PMID:Chemoradiotherapy for localized esophageal cancer: regimen selection and molecular mechanisms of radiosensitization. 1746 36

The purpose of this study was to examine metastasis in different nodal stations and the extent of lymphadenectomy for esophageal carcinoma. Eighty-seven thoracic esophageal squamous carcinoma patients underwent esophagectomy with two-field or three-field lymphadenectomy based on cervical ultrasonography. Thirty-five patients (40.2%) with ultrasonography-detected cervical nodes underwent cervical dissection. Significantly more patients with primary tumors in the upper thoracic esophagus had cervical dissection than patients with tumors in the middle and lower esophagus (66.7%vs. 30.2%, P=0.002). Metastasis to cervical, superior mediastinal, mid-mediastinal, and abdominal nodes were 19.5%, 25.3%, 23%, and 24.1%, respectively. Cervical metastasis was 29.2%, 20.8%, and 10% for upper, middle, and lower thoracic esophageal tumors. Regional lymphadenopathy was found in 48 patients (55.2%) and was significantly related to cervical metastasis (31.3%vs. 5.1%, P=0.002). It was significantly less in upper (37.5%) than in middle (62.3%) and lower (60%) thoracic esophageal tumors (P=0.041). When cervical metastasis was included into regional lymphadenopathy, the difference was no longer significant (45.8%vs. 63.5%, P=0.135). Cervical dissection was associated with significantly more morbidities (60%vs. 34.6%, P=0.020), especially recurrent laryngeal nerve palsy (22.9%vs. 9.6%, P=0.089). Recurrent laryngeal nerve palsy was related significantly to anastomotic leakage (53.8%vs. 13.5%, P=0.001). There was no significant difference between the 2-year survivals for patients with or without cervical metastasis (50.0 vs. 72.0%, P=0.094). We conclude that cervical metastasis is of a similar rate as metastasis to mediastinal or abdominal nodes. Cervical nodes should be taken as regional lymph nodes for thoracic esophageal cancer. Cervical dissection is associated with increased morbidity and should be reserved for patients who may benefit from the procedure. Selective three-field dissection based on ultrasonography is helpful in reducing surgical morbidity while increasing the completeness of resection.
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PMID:Selective three-field lymphadenectomy for thoracic esophageal squamous carcinoma. 1750 16

Neoadjuvant (preoperative) therapy and combined modality therapy have become focuses of interest in the effort to prolong survival and to reduce recurrence rates in patients with esophageal cancer. Staging of the tumor is a critical step in establishing which therapeutic option is appropriate. Once surgical management is advocated, adequate medical imaging is crucial in determining individual anatomical variations. In this communication we report a case of a patient with azygos continuation who underwent chemoradiotherapy with successful downstaging of tumor status from T3-4 to T0 and a nodal status from N1 to N0 as evaluated by medical imaging and who then proceeded to curative surgical resection. This case highlights the potential ability of radiological techniques to confirm both anatomical variations and responses to neoadjuvant therapy.
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PMID:Esophageal cancer complicated with azygos continuation of the inferior vena cava. 1767 70

Esophageal cancer (EC) frequently presents with advanced stages and is associated with high recurrence rates after esophagectomy. The value of an extended lymph node dissection (ELND) remains unclear in this setting. An EC data set was created from the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End-Results 1973-2003 database. Relationships between the number of lymph nodes (LNs) examined and overall survival (OS) were analyzed. From a cohort of 40,129 EC patients, 5,620 individuals were selected. The median age was 65 (range: 11-102), and 75% were men. The median tumor size was 5.0 cm (0.1-30). On multivariate analysis, total LN count (or negative LN count, respectively) was an independent prognostic variable, aside from age, race, resection status, radiation, T category, N category (all at p < 0.0001), and M category (p = 0.0003). Higher total LN count (>30) and negative LN count (>15) categories were associated with best OS and lowest 90-day mortality (p < 0.0001). The numeric LN effect on OS was independent from nodal status or histology. Greater total and negative LN counts are associated with longer EC survival. Although the mechanism remains uncertain, it does not appear to be limited to stage migration. ELND during potentially curative esophagectomy for EC can be supported by the data.
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PMID:Clinical impact of lymphadenectomy extent in resectable esophageal cancer. 1776 19

This review article focuses on nodal staging of esophageal cancer. Transesophageal endoscopic ultrasound (EUS) is the most accurate technique for preoperative local-regional staging of esophageal carcinoma (TN staging), once the CT and/or the PET scan have excluded the presence of distant metastasis. EUS guided fine needle aspiration (EUS-FNA) helps improve diagnostic accuracy in esophageal cancer lymph node staging. In certain subgroup of patients who present with a number of EUS lymph node criteria, EUS FNA may be avoided without affecting diagnostic accuracy. In tumors of the distal esophagus detection and biopsy of celiac lymph nodes may be successfully performed by EUS and EUS FNA, and important therapeutic decissions may be derived from such a practice.
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PMID:Linear EUS: the clinical impact of N staging in esophageal carcinoma. 1792 43


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